Heavy Metal Soldiers lend a helping hand

Chaplain Cpt. Kevin Burton, 47th Brigade Support Battalion chaplain, helps unload food from the delivery truck at the Kelly Memorial Food Pantry, Dec. 13. Burton, with the help of numerous Soldiers from 47th BSB, has been volunteering at the pantry...

Staff Sgt. Frederick Burke, a petroleum supply NCO, passes a box of non-perishable breakfast food to Spc. Charika Toomer, a motor transport operator, so that they can be placed into a basket for delivery to needy families. The Soldiers, both in HHC...

Specialist Jonathan Wright, a human resources clerk with HHC, 47th BSB, 2nd BCT, 1st AD, smiles as he helps pack baskets of food for families in need at the Kelly Memorial Food Pantry, Dec. 13. Soldiers from the 47th BSB have been volunteering at the...

Chaplain Cpt. Kevin Burton, 47th Brigade Support Battalion chaplain, helps unload food from the delivery truck at the Kelly Memorial Food Pantry, Dec. 13. Burton, with the help of numerous Soldiers from 47th BSB, has been volunteering at the pantry...

Staff Sgt. Frederick Burke, a petroleum supply NCO, passes a box of non-perishable breakfast food to Spc. Charika Toomer, a motor transport operator, so that they can be placed into a basket for delivery to needy families. The Soldiers, both in HHC...

Specialist Jonathan Wright, a human resources clerk with HHC, 47th BSB, 2nd BCT, 1st AD, smiles as he helps pack baskets of food for families in need at the Kelly Memorial Food Pantry, Dec. 13. Soldiers from the 47th BSB have been volunteering at the...

In this time of ever-tightening financial belts, our present holiday season will, for some, be one of increased strain. Fortunately there are charitable organizations in the El Paso area that are able to share the load; charitable organizations like the Kelly Memorial Food Pantry.
The pantry, located at 915 North Florence in downtown El Paso, provides baskets of free food to families who are in need. Clients of the food pantry need only provide photo identification and proof of residence in El Paso county, and are then eligible to receive food twice a month.
"We are an all-faith organization, supported by five local El Paso churches and staffed entirely by volunteers," said John Schwarting, the administrative head at the pantry and a Pastor at Trinity-First United Methodist, one of the five supporting churches.
We provide emergency assistance to individuals, as determined by income based qualifications, said Schwarting. Schwarting continued by explaining that Soldiers can receive emergency assistance in some instances, particularly when facing pay discrepancies.
For the Soldiers of 47th Brigade Support Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, the pantry provides a way to "give back to the community," said the 47th BSB chaplain, Capt. Kevin Burton.
"Having a program like this gives Soldiers the opportunity to find ways to build resiliency and it creates a much more rounded Soldier," Burton said.
The 47th BSB has been volunteering nearly twice a month since March 2011and have volunteered more than 500 hours. In that time, they've helped to distribute more than 1,000,000 pounds of food to more than 7,000 families.
"I don't get the opportunity to volunteer so when I can it is very gratifying," said Spc. Jonathan Wright, a human resources clerk in Headquarters, Headquarters Company, 47th BSB who was present at the Dec. 13 volunteer event. "If I had the opportunity to volunteer more often, I would; especially during the holidays," Wright said.
The Soldiers of 2nd BCT, 1st AD volunteer for numerous causes throughout the El Paso community, including the building of two homes for wounded veterans Marine Cpl. Daniel Gasca and U.S. Army Spc. Adrian Garcia and the decoration of the Ronald McDonald House for the holidays.
"Because of what the Soldiers do here today 1,400 people will eat this weekend," said Chaplain Burton. "Soldiers don't often get the opportunity to see an immediate impact like that."
For the Soldiers of the 47th Brigade Support Battalion, volunteering at the food pantry provides an opportunity to give back to the larger community, outside of the more self-contained Fort Bliss community.
Moreover, amidst the holiday season it provides something else as well: a charitable way to spread a bit of holiday cheer to the El Paso community.